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Among the Intellectualoids

The Liberal Jesus

A plethora of new books is pouring out explaining why Jesus is not a Republican. The latest is by the very angry Randall Balmer.

WASHINGTON — A plethora of new books is poring out explaining why Jesus is not a Republican. Supposedly millions of conservatives believe that the Savior does have a political registration. So liberal theologians and activists are rushing to the barricades to correct the record.

The irony is that theological conservatives are the most likely to recognize that the Eternal Son of God transcends human political labels, and the least likely to ascribe salvific importance to politics, important though politics may be.

Theological liberals, who usually have abandoned doctrines about divine transcendence and eternal judgment, are far more likely to prioritize politics. In fact, politics is often all they have.

The latest book of warning is Randall Balmer’s Thy Kingdom Come: How the Religious Right Distorts the Faith and Threatens America: An Evangelical’s Lament. Although clearly a political liberal, Balmer emphatically denies that he is a theological liberal. Indeed, he is a “passionate evangelical” who is distressed by evangelical alignment with political conservatives. He is particularly distressed the conservative evangelicals are supporting the Bush Administration, whose “chicanery, bullying, and flouting of the rule of law…make Richard Nixon look like a fraternity prankster.”

Balmer, who teaches American religious history at Barnard College, insists that evangelicals historically and rightly are aligned with “progressive” political causes like the abolition of slavery, universal suffrage, and public education. But seduced by the issues of homosexuality and abortion, much of the organized evangelical movement in the U.S. has now sold its soul to the Republican Party. With his usual nuanced subtlety, Balmer discerns that the Religious Right “hankers for the kind of homogeneous theocracy that the Puritans tried to establish in 17th-century Massachusetts” and “renege on the First Amendment.”

Conservative evangelicals are also hypocrites, Balmer contends. Absurdly, he cites conservative evangelical support for the bribe-taking Congressman Randy Cunningham, for a Washington state mayor who solicited sexual favors over the Internet, for Ralph Reed despite his coziness with gambling interests, and for the casino visiting William Bennett. After their public exposure, of course, Cunningham, the Spokane mayor, and Ralph Reed are all now politically finished. Bennett, who is Catholic and not Baptist, probably was not sinning in Las Vegas, according to the teachings of his own church.

Much of Balmer’s reaction to conservative religionists is angry and personal. In a chapter from his book excerpted in the Chronicle of Higher Education, he alleges that evangelicals “prize conformity above all else.” Supposedly longtime friends and family members have stricken him from their Christmas card list because he has daringly “challenged the shibboleths of the Religious Right” (i.e. he has liberal political beliefs).

Given the heat and tone of Balmer’s rhetoric, it is probably not his politics but his irritable attitude that has estranged his relationships with fellow evangelicals. His anger leads him to distort and assume the very worst about their motives and positions. Who wants to send a Christmas card to the angry cousin who is always denouncing you?

ONE EXAMPLE OF BALMER’S technique involves my organization, the Institute on Religion and Democracy (IRD). Supposedly, the Religious Right, with which Balmer lumps IRD, refuses to “climb out of the Republican Party’s cozy bed over the torture of human beings.” He claims, after having contacted us during the course of his book writing, that IRD is “eager to defend” the supposedly pro-torture policies of the Bush Administration.

By “defend,” what he really meant is that we declined to denounce the Bush Administration. We also declined to denounce the Clinton Administration. IRD primarily reports about what church officials do and say politically. Almost never do we critique U.S. politicians. Balmer omits that fact because he evidently was looking for a stereotype to fulfill. He was kind enough to include an actual quote from IRD, which was that “torture is a violation of human dignity, contrary to biblical teachings.” But because we do not automatically accept his premise that the Bush Administration supports torture and respond with a denunciation, therefore we are soft on torture.

p>Balmer basically wants his fellow evangelicals to stop supporting conservative political causes and candidates and to start espousing the liberal ones that he prefers. Here is how he heatedly describes the highly problematic conservative evangelicals: They support br> /p>
an expansion of tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans, the continued prosecution of a war in the Middle East that enraged our longtime allies and would not meet even the barest of just-war criteria, and a rejiggering of Social Security, the effect of which, most observers agree, would be to fray the social-safety net for the poorest among us. Public education is very much imperiled by Republican policies, to the evident satisfaction of the religious right, and it seeks to replace science curricula with theology, thereby transforming students into catechumens. America’s grossly disproportionate consumption of energy continues unabated, prompting demands for oil exploration in environmentally sensitive areas. The Bush administration has jettisoned U.S. participation in the Kyoto Protocol on climate change, which called on Americans to make at least a token effort to combat global warming. Corporate interests are treated with the kind of reverence and deference once reserved for the deity.
br> Of course, millions of evangelicals agree with Balmer’s agenda of the left. Twenty or thirty percent of evangelicals, which includes millions of voters, support Democratic candidates of whom Balmer would probably approve. Of course, mainline Protestant officials espouse liberal political causes that Balmer supports. Meanwhile, most mainline Protestants tend to vote Republican. Catholics are usually evenly divided, but in recent years, church-going Catholics have favored Republicans. Black churchgoers are socially conservative but vote Democratic. No faith community is monolithic.
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topics:
Education, Social Security, Religion, Abortion, Environment, Global Warming, Books, Law, Energy, Oil

About the Author

Mark Tooley is president of the Institute on Religion and Democracy in Washington, D.C. and author of Methodism and Politics in the Twentieth CenturyYou can follow him on Twitter @markdtooley.


Letter to the Editor View all comments (4) |

Dr. W. David Berglund | 12.5.09 @ 6:31PM

Hello:
How are you?
I was very scared when Michelle Milken popped up.
Nothing like an English major gone create writing crazy.
Separation of Church and State, PLEASE.
P.S. Karl Rove is ruthless in his hot button polarization's.
PEACE ON EARTH GOOD WILL TO ALL

Dr. W. Berglund | 12.5.09 @ 6:45PM

Dr. that is crazy talk.

Dr. W. David Berglund | 12.5.09 @ 6:42PM

Hello Mark Tooley:
How are you?
I like to know people by their actions rather than their words.
What group would Jesus be associated with via his actions:
JKK, MLK & RFK
or
Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan & George W. Bush?

4,500 children will die today because they didn't have clean drinking water, just abortion is the battle cry with people wasting presious time in front of a doctors office.
PEACE ON EARTH GOOD WILL TO ALL

Dr. W. David Berglund | 12.5.09 @ 6:57PM

Sorry about precious.
That Dr. Berglund is a real whack job.

Millions of babies that have already been born are dying. Please put your energies into these children instead of a $20 a pill ED prescription that is tax payer funded.

Pro-life, don't have an abortion and educate children in reality.
Pro-choice, don't have an abortion and educate children in reality.
Both groups be thankful it is performed in a legal setting in case of emergencies. Use "IT" to stop abuses.
PEACE ON EARTH GOOD WILL TO ALL.

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